Skip to main content

Conduent makes contactless splash in Venice

EMV system covers trams, buses and - of course - ferries, boats and waterbuses
By Adam Hill July 3, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
Don't Look Now but it's a Conduent validator in Venice (image: AVM)

Public transport riders in the international tourist hotspot of Venice can now pay for fares using credit and debit cards, as well as NFC-enabled smartphones and watches.

Conduent Transportation, along with Elavon and Visa, has launched a contactless open payment system on the Italian city's transportation network, which is managed by Azienda Veneziana della Mobilità (AVM) and comprises buses, trams and - famously - waterbuses.

The new EMV (Europay, Mastercard and Visa) payment system offers easier access to AVM’s local public transport service in the metropolitan area of Venice, as well as integrated mobility services in the urban area. 

Around 180 million passengers travel on the Venice public transport network every year. 

Conduent has supplied over 2,200 validators, which enable fare payment on Venice’s fleet of 149 vessels (water buses, speedboats, motorboats and ferries), more than 150 wharfs, 540 buses, 20 trams and two people movers. 

The validators will also take Venezia Unica cards and electronic tickets, and the new system allows best fare pricing, which means users are automatically charged the lowest available price for the journeys taken each day.

“It’s been a few busy months of work that has made EMV technology a reality on the whole transport network managed by AVM,” said Giovanni Seno, general manager of Gruppo AVM. 

“We have progressively improved the customer experience of the new validators – also listening to feedback received from passengers – and we are looking forward to the summer season with an innovation that has enormous potential, both in terms of market penetration and in terms of impact on our organisation.”

Jean-Charles Zaia, Conduent president, transit solutions, says the company is "honoured" to be part of AVM’s modernisation programme.

The company has implemented similar systems in the Veneto region, in Belluno and Verona, and has also deployed contactless open payment systems in cities in the Lombardy and Liguria regions.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Init wins National Express ticketing contract
    July 8, 2016
    German ticketing specialist Init is expanding its presence in the Midlands region of the UK with the award of a contract by National Express West Midlands for the supply and installation of a ticketing system. The company also supplies transport operators in and around Nottingham and Derby with ticketing and fare management systems. Init will equip 1,600 National Express West Midlands buses with driver consoles, on-board computers, ticket printers and EMV and ITSO-certified validators, as well as service
  • Milestone for Cubic and Vancouver’s contactless card
    July 21, 2016
    More than one million Compass Cards are now in use for Metro Vancouver’s public transit users since its launch in 2015. Compass Card is the contactless smart card payment system designed and integrated by Cubic for the region’s transportation authority, TransLink. The system is also processing more than 42 million card ’taps’ each month. Compass links all of TransLink’s services and fare products in Metro Vancouver to a single payment system, including West Coast Express, SkyTrain, SeaBus and buses, r
  • Conduent upgrades New York tolling tech 
    February 24, 2022
    Contracts support the MTA, NYSTA and Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
  • Masabi and Fujitsu Australia just the ticket
    February 11, 2022
    Partnership says it has signed first deal to deliver FPaaS across Australia and New Zealand